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...i found this and dropped it here.

today: 0 | this month: 11894 | latest: 2026-07-12 | total: 17088


  • 2026-07-07
    West Oakland Camera Club
    The West Oakland Camera Club (WOCC) is a Michigan-based photography club affiliated with the Greater Detroit Camera Club Council, with over 40 years of history advancing members' photographic skills through shared knowledge and technique. The site features member galleries, competition results, discussion forums, and meeting information for a club that welcomes the public to its bi-monthly gatherings.
  • 2026-07-07
    whoa
    A minimalist Neocities page built around a Photo Cube feature, suggesting a focus on images or visual content. The sparse structure and single image make it one of the barest personal pages imaginable, with almost no navigable content beyond a web counter and a few links.
  • 2026-07-07
    William Hark's Photo Pages (Butterfly, Comet, Kenya Safari, Storm and Tornado)
    William T. Hark, M.D. and amateur radio operator KV0RTX, shares his stock photography and video work specializing in butterflies, storm chasing, tornadoes, wildlife, and travel. The site covers an impressive range of subjects from Kenya safari images to comet and aurora photography, with sections on weather data and storm chaser life on the road.
  • 2026-07-07
    Working with Images
    Images & Photography Links: A curated links page from the University of Washington TRIO Training program, gathering resources on digital photography basics, image optimization for the web, and free-to-use Creative Commons photo sources. It serves students participating in TRIO Quest competitions like PhotoEssays and DigiSites, offering tutorials on everything from camera selection to saving images in Photoshop.
  • 2026-07-07
    wWw.RajiNet.Tk--->>- - -Net Gallery
    RajiNet is a personal photo gallery showcasing snapshots of life in Waterloo, Ontario, with collections covering local landscapes, close-up nature shots, animals, and architectural landmarks. The site offers a charming glimpse into the Waterloo region through candid photography organized into neatly browsable galleries.
  • 2026-07-07
    York Chou's Gallery
    York Chou is a freelance photographer and editor at POCO.CN whose gallery showcases travel and lifestyle photography spanning South Korea, Xi'an, Shanghai, Phuket, and beyond. The site presents neatly organized photo collections covering street scenes, weddings, cityscapes, and everyday moments with a clean, image-forward layout.
  • 2026-07-07
    のりの思い出ギャラリー
    Nori's Memory Gallery is a Japanese personal site presenting a curated collection of cherished photographs and memories. The title suggests a nostalgic visual archive, making it a personal snapshot of one person's life and experiences.
  • 2026-07-07
    All about Rainbows and Color
    RainbowSpec is an in-depth yet beginner-friendly educational site exploring how rainbows and color work, covering everything from the visible spectrum and refraction to supernumerary rainbows, fogbows, glories, and thin film interference. The site is thoughtfully organized with starred pages marking foundational concepts, and it links to classic atmospheric optics references that inspired its creation.
  • 2026-07-07
    Are you a quack?
    A physics professor at SUNY Stony Brook takes aim at pseudoscience and scientific quackery, exploring the psychological and personality traits that lead people to reject well-established science like evolution, vaccination, and modern physics. The page is a sharp, witty critique of fringe theorists who show up insisting their ideas will overturn all known physics, drawing a careful distinction between bold legitimate scientists and true cranks.
  • 2026-07-07
    B. A New Understanding
    Curved Spacetime: A lecture page from a University of Houston astronomy course (ASTR 3131) explaining Einstein's theory of general relativity and the concept of curved spacetime. It covers how mass and energy deform the fabric of spacetime, using accessible analogies like a ball on a bedsheet to illustrate four-dimensional curvature.
  • 2026-07-07
    Chaos at Maryland
    The Chaos Group at the University of Maryland presents their research into chaotic dynamics, covering topics like fractal basin boundaries, chaotic scattering, strange attractors, and controlling chaos. Affiliated with multiple departments including Physics, Mathematics, and Electrical Engineering, this site offers a window into decades of groundbreaking nonlinear dynamics research dating back to the mid-1970s.
  • 2026-07-07
    Collection of remarkable three-body motions
    Created by physicist E. Butikov of IFMO, this collection presents interactive Java applets simulating remarkable three-body gravitational motion problems, including the famous figure-eight periodic orbit and restricted three-body scenarios. It bridges classical Newtonian mechanics and celestial mechanics with hands-on simulations suitable for students and advanced researchers exploring planetary system dynamics.
  • 2026-07-07
    CONTRIBUTIONS OF 20TH CENTURY WOMEN TO PHYSICS
    Hosted by UCLA, this scholarly archive documents the original scientific contributions of 83 eminent women physicists who worked before 1976, drawing on primary sources including the papers in which their discoveries were first reported. Visitors can explore an annotated photo gallery, historical essays, a searchable database, and firsthand accounts spanning fields from nuclear physics to space physics.
  • 2026-07-07
    David Tong
    Cambridge Lecture Notes on Theoretical Physics: David Tong, a professor at Cambridge University, offers a comprehensive collection of free lecture notes covering nearly every area of theoretical physics, from classical mechanics and electromagnetism to quantum field theory and string theory. The notes are aimed at undergraduates and graduate students and represent a genuinely deep academic resource, with dozens of individual courses each spanning multiple topics.
  • 2026-07-07
    Donald Simanek's Pages; science, pseudoscience, education, humor.
    Donald Simanek, a physics professor, has assembled a sprawling collection of resources covering physics puzzles, perpetual motion machines, pseudoscience debunking, creationism criticism, and science humor. Highlights include the Museum of Unworkable Devices, illustrated lectures, and a rich archive of skeptical and educational content that has earned recognition as one of the top skeptical websites on the web.
  • 2026-07-07
    Gerard ′t Hooft
    The official homepage of Gerard 't Hooft, Nobel Prize-winning theoretical physicist at Utrecht University, covering his research into quantum mechanics, quantum field theory, and black hole physics. Visitors can access his lecture notes, publication list, curriculum vitae, and his ongoing work on deterministic quantum mechanics and the origins of quantum behavior.
  • 2026-07-07
    Gravity Probe B
    Testing Einstein's Universe: The official site for NASA's Gravity Probe B mission, a Stanford University experiment designed to test two key predictions of Einstein's general theory of relativity using ultra-precise gyroscopes orbiting Earth. Visitors can explore the mission's history dating back to 1959, the groundbreaking engineering advances required to make it possible, technical papers, image galleries, and video overviews of spacetime concepts.
  • 2026-07-07
    HEPData Homepage
    HEPData is an open repository for publication-related High-Energy Physics data, hosting experimental datasets from major LHC collaborations including ATLAS, ALICE, CMS, and LHCb. Researchers can search and submit data using advanced query syntax, making it an essential reference tool for particle physics scientists worldwide.
  • 2026-07-07
    Home Page for Richard Fitzpatrick
    Richard Fitzpatrick is a Professor of Physics at the University of Texas at Austin, specializing in fusion studies, with this page serving as a hub for his research, teaching materials, academic papers, talks, and books. Visitors interested in plasma physics or fusion energy will find a gateway to substantial scholarly resources from an active academic researcher.
  • 2026-07-07
    HyperPhysics
    HyperPhysics is a sprawling educational reference site from Georgia State University covering virtually every topic in physics through an interconnected web of concept maps and concise explanations. Visitors can explore everything from classical mechanics and thermodynamics to quantum physics and relativity, with formulas, diagrams, and worked examples throughout.
  • 2026-07-07
    James Ziegler - SRIM & TRIM
    James Ziegler's authoritative site hosts SRIM and TRIM, widely used scientific software packages that calculate the stopping and range of ions in matter for research and engineering applications. The site includes downloadable software, textbooks, tutorials, a historical review spanning 100 years of ion stopping research, and resources covering topics from cosmic ray soft errors to neutron damage.
  • 2026-07-07
    Julian Bunn's Home Page
    Julian Bunn is a computational scientist at Caltech with a background in particle physics at CERN, DESY, and the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory, now working on seismology and earthquake early warning systems like ShakeAlert. His sprawling homepage serves as a personal aide-memoire covering decades of scientific work, publications, ham radio, genetic algorithms, and even obscure retro computing projects from the DECUS era.
  • 2026-07-07
    Mike Daub – Physics Educator Dude – Personal Website
    Mike Daub is a physics and mathematics educator with a master's from UC Berkeley who spent five seasons at the South Pole researching experimental cosmology on the ACBAR project. His personal site covers his academic background, libertarian politics, photography, and a no-nonsense hand-coded HTML philosophy with no frameworks or tracking.
  • 2026-07-07
    Open Source Physics
    The Open Source Physics project, supported by NSF and the AAPT, provides free computational curriculum resources including simulations, modeling tools, and student worksheets designed to help learners explore physical phenomena through computer modeling. Highlights include the Tracker video analysis tool and Easy Java Simulations (EJS) framework, making it a comprehensive hub for physics educators and students at all levels.
  • 2026-07-07
    P.P. Cook's Tangent Space
    P.P. Cook is a theoretical physics lecturer who writes infrequent but thoughtful posts exploring topics like quantum mechanics, string theory, Dynkin diagrams, and the philosophy of simulation. The blog blends rigorous mathematical content with accessible commentary, touching on books, art inspired by physics, and the day-to-day perspective of an academic on a finite contract.
  • 2026-07-07
    Physics Flash Animations
    Created by a University of Toronto physicist, this collection features 99 Flash animations covering topics from Quantum Mechanics and Relativity to Chaos and Fluid Mechanics, making abstract physics concepts visually intuitive. A bonus tutorial teaches how to build your own physics animations in Flash, and the animations are available in multiple languages under a Creative Commons license.
  • 2026-07-07
    Physicspages Home Page
    PhysicsPages is a detailed self-study companion covering classical mechanics, quantum mechanics, electrodynamics, relativity, string theory, and more, written with honest, jargon-free explanations that avoid the dreaded 'obviously' of typical textbooks. The creator presents rigorous, math-heavy notes designed for university students or independent learners working through structured physics topics.
  • 2026-07-07
    PhysLink.com
    Physics and Astronomy Online: Founded in 1995 by physicist Anton Skorucak, PhysLink.com is a comprehensive online portal covering physics and astronomy through reference materials, expert Q&A, physical constants, calculators, and educational articles. Visitors can explore everything from quantum mechanics and general relativity to astronomy news, Nobel Prize info, and even physics humor and cartoons.
  • 2026-07-07
    Robert G. Brown's Home Page
    Robert G. Brown, a physicist at Duke University, shares an extensive collection of free online textbooks, physics study materials, poetry collections, philosophy essays, and beowulf cluster computing resources. The site is a sprawling intellectual hub covering everything from GPL software tools to metaphysics, all freely licensed under an open public license.
  • 2026-07-07
    SCIENCE HOBBYIST
    Traffic Waves, physics for bored commuters: William J. Beaty, a Seattle electrical engineer, explores the fascinating physics of traffic jams, showing how waves propagate through congested highways much like fluid dynamics. The site features animations, experiments, and practical techniques for how a single driver can actually dissolve traffic slowdowns, making it a genuinely mind-expanding read for any commuter.

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Have a link suggestion? Send it to pablomurad@pm.me.